Inference of macromolecular assemblies from crystalline state

E Krissinel, K Henrick - Journal of molecular biology, 2007 - Elsevier
Journal of molecular biology, 2007Elsevier
We discuss basic physical–chemical principles underlying the formation of stable
macromolecular complexes, which in many cases are likely to be the biological units
performing a certain physiological function. We also consider available theoretical
approaches to the calculation of macromolecular affinity and entropy of complexation. The
latter is shown to play an important role and make a major effect on complex size and
symmetry. We develop a new method, based on chemical thermodynamics, for automatic …
We discuss basic physical–chemical principles underlying the formation of stable macromolecular complexes, which in many cases are likely to be the biological units performing a certain physiological function. We also consider available theoretical approaches to the calculation of macromolecular affinity and entropy of complexation. The latter is shown to play an important role and make a major effect on complex size and symmetry. We develop a new method, based on chemical thermodynamics, for automatic detection of macromolecular assemblies in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) entries that are the results of X-ray diffraction experiments. As found, biological units may be recovered at 80–90% success rate, which makes X-ray crystallography an important source of experimental data on macromolecular complexes and protein–protein interactions. The method is implemented as a public WWW service†.
Elsevier